Thursday, May 19, 2016

Abstract-Displacement Current Mediated Resonances in Terahertz Metamaterials



  1. Chao Liu1
  2. Kriti Agarwal1
  3. Yuping Zhang2,
  4. Dibakar Roy Chowdhury3
  5. Abul K. Azad2and
  6. Jeong-Hyun Cho1,*
Version of Record online: 18 MAY 2016
DOI: 10.1002/adom.201600196









http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/adom.201600196/abstract

Terahertz metamaterials (THz MMs) have been proven to be good candidates for chemical, biological, temperature, strain, and position sensing. However, currently developed thin-metal-film-based split ring resonator (SRR) MMs have relatively low quality factor (Q-factors), leading to a poor sensitivity, which is one of the obstacles for development of sensors. In order to enhance the Q-factor, novel THz MMs, nanopillar-based MMs, are designed, fabricated, and characterized. The nanopillar-based MMs excite the inductive-capacitive resonance via desplacement currents, showing a significantly enhanced Q-factor around 450, which is about 30 times higher than typical thin-metal-film-based MMs. Nanopillar-based MMs also show 17 times larger frequency shift compared to the metal-film-based MMs when the permittivity of the ambient dielectric properties of the MMs changes. Due to high Q-factor and large frequency shift, the nanopillar-based THz MMs utilizing displacement current have great potential for highly sensitive chemical and biomaterial detection as well as frequency-agile THz devices.

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